Showing posts with label credit cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label credit cards. Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2008

Where You Live; What you are Worth - Retirement Planning and Credit

Do you live in a state where housing has taken a big hit? Do you live in, near or around a place where credit has all but dried up and foreclosures have appeared like so much acne before prom night?
Have you felt immune to the downside fallout of those events because you pay your bills (and more importantly, your mortgage) on time, have little or no debt and money in the bank?

The credit crisis is about to make itself known to millions of Americans who otherwise would have felt as though all of that bad financial news was not their concern. Even folks who have pristine credit, the very ones who use at it is supposed to be used and were proud of the lending power (credit limit) these credit issuers gave them. You were a good risk.

Lately though, credit card companies are estimating, or should I say, re-estimating that risk and its worth to their bottom line. Bad loan decisions and the overall tightening credit market has forced many lenders to rethink their generosity and with that, how much money you can borrow. What was previously a five figure credit limit on home equity lines and credit cards has been reduced often by as much as 90%.

What can you do?
In most instances, nothing. If the financial institution you do business with decides that there is overwhelming risk in your ability to pay off balances, even if you have done so faithfully in the past, the credit limit can and in many cases, without warning, be reduced. Primarily, this seems to be targeted towards small business owners who rely on those credit limits for business and travel decisions. But it is finding its way into the average person’s financial lives as well.

If there is so much as a hint of financial stress in your credit score, even if you don’t live in a state with a high degree of foreclosures, you will eventually come under scrutiny. Best thing to do is maintain your credit score. Do this by paying your bills on time and by communicating with your lender. In many instances, they would like to assess their risk and remedy the situation to not only their best interest, but yours as well.

They may lower or waive any fees on the account or renegotiate the terms of the current loan. Do this by threatening to shop around. There are some better risk-situated financial institutions willing to lure business away from competitors.

The last thing you can do is reconsider the project you might be starting around the house. Determining the value of a remodel has gotten more difficult with the best changes coming from structural improvements rather than upgrades to living spaces. Exterior maintenance and things like electrical, insulation, and plumbing will be more worthwhile fix-it projects than a new kitchen or bathroom.

Small businesses might reconsider the need for certain business trips in terms of return on that investment of time. In some cases, the credit companies may be unwittingly making a business decision for you.

Monday, June 23, 2008

H is for Honesty - Retirement Planning


We all want honesty, except when it comes to our finances. We desperately want to be told what we want to hear about our retirement plans rather than what we need to hear. And the honesty we look for - or better yet, the lies we would like to be told are as follows:

1. We will have enough money to retire.
I would love to believe that you or any one has this calculated correctly. It seems that each day the free market has the opportunity to do what it does best, the number we have assumed is best case scenario, needs to be recalculated.

2. We will be able to get debt free.
Debt free is a nice goal but debt management is a more honest approach to what your future holds. We use credit at the pumps, in restaurants or any time - and this is just good advice - we lose sight of our credit cards during a purchase. So each month, we need to manage that debt.

3. We will be able to estimate the cost of insurance.
Most of can't do that now. Do you assume that it will be easier on a fixed income? think again. Fidelity suggests that a nest egg of just over a million dollars might be enough to cover your future health insurance costs.

4. Our kids and in some case, our parents will not have an effect on our retirement plans.
If you believe this to be true, you never had kids and/or your parents have since been deceased. otherwise, these two groups will cost you more than you think. A recent New York Times article suggested that inheritances that may have been expected by many near-to-retirement adults can no longer be assumed. For those of us with parents who have no inheritance to spend down, you may be the only salvation for their financial well-being. And your kids...

5. Your investments are not as honest as you once assumed they were.
Look at oil. Look at the stock market. Look at bonds. Look at your tax bill. Need I say more?

Being financially honest with yourself is step one in considering how far you need to go to get to some semblance of retirement.

A is for Asset Allocation

B is for Balance

C is for Continuity

D is for Diversity

E is for (Tracking) Errors

F is for Free-Float

G is for Gross Income